Book,  Par.

  1     I,      4|                          Thus the State had been revolutionised,
  2     I,      4|         some day rend asunder the State." ~ ~
  3     I,      5|   Tiberius Nero was master of the State. ~ ~
  4     I,      9|         called and elected by the State rather than of having crept
  5     I,     10|        named the chief men of the State, most of whom he hated,
  6     I,     11|         in whatever concerned the State he would use only his own
  7     I,     12|      abundant means to coerce the State, requires forsooth the defence
  8     I,     13|        and the necessities of the State in which laws had then no
  9     I,     13|          of a single man. Yet the State had been organized under
 10     I,     14|       hand, "that filial duty and State necessity were merely assumed
 11     I,     14|            and turned against the State the arms with which he had
 12     I,     15|        was Livia, terrible to the State as a mother, terrible to
 13     I,     15|    affection or any regard to the State, but, having thoroughly
 14     I,     16|          rule. Consequently, in a state which had the support of
 15     I,     16|           of the resources of the State, of the number of citizens
 16     I,     17|           the whole burden of the State, yet he would undertake
 17     I,     17|          Caesar, what part of the State you wish to have intrusted
 18     I,     17|    admission that the body of the State was one, and must be directed
 19     I,     18|       Caesar, will you suffer the State to be without a head?" Scaurus
 20     I,     21|                      This was the state of affairs at Rome when
 21     I,     30|       with the leading men of the State and with two praetorian
 22     I,     41|         victories aggrandised the State; it was from them that emperors
 23     I,     46|     conceded to the soldiery, the State was equally in jeopardy.~ ~
 24     I,     52|        their grandsire and to the State."~ ~
 25     I,     55|         me than my father and the State. But he will surely have
 26     I,     61|           imperil himself and the State. Indeed, many conflicting
 27     I,     71|         from the chief men of the State; Tiberius, Drusus, Claudius,
 28     I,     96|   contrary to the religion of the State for the emperor's image,
 29     I,    103|            and, further, that the State was unequal to the burden,
 30     I,    105|        the worst, disgrace to the State. He went so far at last
 31    II,     34|       eaten into the heart of the State. Firmius Catus, a senator,
 32    II,     37|       without counsel, offered to state the charges against him
 33    II,     39|          old-standing evil in the State. ~ ~
 34    II,     41|     anything they thought for the State's advantage. Gallus Asinius
 35    II,     41|     another with the Scipios. The State was the standard of everything;
 36    II,     43|          was so formidable to the State, that in a certain cause
 37    II,     44|           be transacted, that the State might have honour of its
 38    II,     47|       never be satisfied, and the State will be bankrupt. Certainly
 39    II,     49|    checked, would have ruined the State by discord and civil war.
 40    II,     91|     friendship, and, as many also state, ordered him to quit the
 41    II,    104|      general, with hints that the State was being threatened with
 42    II,    111|           of the Salii; chairs of state with oaken garlands over
 43   III,      3|       black, the knights in their state robes, burnt vestments and
 44   III,      7|          Princes were mortal; the State was everlasting. Let them
 45   III,     16|        then he had threatened the State with war, and had been defeated
 46   III,     37|        attractions of a childless state. Meanwhile there was an
 47   III,     40|     privileges of fatherhood, the State, as universal parent, might
 48   III,     46|          not so beneficial to the State as ruinous to many persons,
 49   III,     59|        Julius Indus from the same state, who was at feud with Florus
 50   III,     60|         the greater wealth of the state and the distance of the
 51   III,     69|          will be no danger to the State; if put to death, he will
 52   III,     72|         still more hurtful to the State, also, how undignified it
 53   III,     73|           your presence, and then state what I think to be for the
 54   III,     74|     persons will cry out that the State is revolutionised, that
 55   III,     76|         will be utter ruin to the State. The cure for other evils
 56   III,     80|        his plans on behalf of the State, and then added a few remarks,
 57   III,    103|         with impunity, though the State was staggering under the
 58   III,    106|           for good service to the State were saluted with cheers
 59   III,    107|          foremost position in the State by his legal attainments,
 60    IV,      1|           of tranquillity for the State and prosperity for his own
 61    IV,      7|          other departments of the State, inasmuch as that year brought
 62    IV,     11|   adversity must alike affect the State." ~ ~
 63    IV,     23|           were leading men in the State. However he addressed a
 64    IV,     23|     charged them with rending the State almost by civil war. "There
 65    IV,     38|         on two leading men in the state, his own intimate friends,
 66    IV,     40|           be ineffective, and the State brought to the verge of
 67    IV,     42|           an oath that this was a State necessity. The act was thought
 68    IV,     53|      fearless of enmity, when the State required it. These sentiments
 69    IV,     56|         in the highest offices of state? You indeed desire to keep
 70    IV,     75|     thoughts of putting the Roman state under Germanicus, his sister'
 71    IV,     85|         once been on the cares of state, he was now for thoroughly
 72    IV,     88|      punished a bitter foe to the State, and the emperor further
 73    VI,      6|        But the leading men of the State failed to convict him on
 74    VI,     12|     limits. Let plots against the State, murderous designs against
 75    VI,     16|           of the magnitude of the State and the slowness of legal
 76    VI,     18|         used the authority of the State to put down the people.
 77    VI,     20|    against him originating in his state policy, and requested that
 78    VI,     22|     borrower gave security to the State in land to double the amount.
 79    VI,     25|        they were forfeited to the State. Executions were now a stimulus
 80    VI,     33|           ruin and hostile to the State. And, what seemed most horrible
 81    VI,     36|          into the miseries of the State, he chose, in anger and
 82    VI,     74|           been the scourge of the State? He now foresaw a still
 83    XI,      3|      services of Asiaticus to the State, his recent campaign in
 84    XI,      9|           the tranquillity of the State for none but peaceful gains.
 85    XI,     18|     happened in evil days for the State that advisers had been summoned
 86    XI,     22|        disasters will fall on the State. If he is successful, so
 87    XI,     32|           as being welcome to the State, were undertaken with hearty
 88    XI,     37|  certainly brought scandal on the State, but we were a long way
 89   XII,      6|          issue in calamity to the State. These scruples ceased not
 90   XII,      8|          came a revolution in the State, and everything was under
 91   XII,     11|          friendship, founded on a state alliance, and we ought to
 92   XII,     25|        mischievous designs on the State, and must have the means
 93   XII,     29|           of the interests of the State, and to provide some support
 94   XII,     49|          issue in the ruin of the State. Claudius, enraged by what
 95   XII,     54|         governor of Syria, of the state of Armenia.~ ~
 96   XII,     57|       cared for the honour of the State; most argued in favour of
 97   XII,     58|     circumstances, the disordered state of affairs. He quickly crossed
 98   XII,     63|        than of the welfare of the State, and allowing himself to
 99   XII,     70|       victory were binding on the State. Caius Oppius and Cornelius
100  XIII,      5|     private establishment and the State should be kept entirely
101  XIII,     16|        that his accounts with the State were to be considered as
102  XIII,     19|    remaining hopes centred in the State, and all the more tenderness
103  XIII,     21|          seize the control of the State. All this Iturius and Calvisius
104  XIII,     24|           to become master of the State so as to sit in judgment
105  XIII,     33|    remained some shadow of a free state. A contest arose between
106  XIII,     58|   beginning of great evils to the State. There was at Rome one Sabina
107  XIII,     65|      revenues which supported the State were to be diminished; for
108  XIII,     73|          themselves. Meanwhile, a state in alliance with us, that
109   XIV,     16|           to show that it was the State's good fortune which had
110   XIV,     28|           contests, when once the State undertakes the expenditure.
111   XIV,     37|      every grade, so as to form a state by their unity and mutual
112   XIV,     51|            was sent to survey the state of Britain, Nero having
113   XIV,     55|     remain unimpaired, should the State ever need my counsels. To-day
114   XIV,     59|          empire, replied that the State had a resource, and on their
115   XIV,     64|         while the miseries of the State were daily growing worse,
116   XIV,     77|    stripped for exercise. In that state the centurion slew him in
117   XIV,     78|      thought to the safety of the State. On this pretext a thanksgiving
118    XV,     21|        himself, he said, made the state an annual present of sixty
119    XV,     29|          and had made vows in the State's name, which were repeated
120    XV,     32|          was questioned as to the state of Armenia. He replied that
121    XV,     32|         with the chief men of the State whether they should accept
122    XV,     38|          tribunal, was a chair of state, and on the chair a statue
123    XV,     45|        and that all things in the State would remain unchanged and
124    XV,     60|         no wrong, but love of the State which linked him with the
125    XV,     61|   choosing some one to rescue the State in its distress, they associated
126    XV,     63|           of having destroyed the State. Only let Proculus gird
127    XV,     64|         to accomplish what on the State's behalf they had undertaken." ~ ~
128    XV,     65|         another emperor, make the State his own gift. Vestinus,
129    XV,     74|        die while you cling to the State and invoke aid for liberty.
130    XV,     96|          enemy and traitor to the State, till the unanimous voice
131   XVI,      3|      causes of the poverty of the State. Bassus indeed dug up his
132   XVI,      7|      ought to be removed from the State, and made it a reproach
133   XVI,     17| encountered in the service of the State with such a monotony of
134   XVI,     17|          heaven against the Roman State that one may not pass over
135   XVI,     32|        this house, the offices of State, the city of Rome seem as
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